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Show a. " THE- AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN, Thursday,- January 22, ; 1959 n 1. Sis . Utah Senator to Make . Ten Appointments To Marine Academy; ,r-,ntnr FrantfErMoss i D- UUh) has announced he is accepting ac-cepting applications from youhg men who are interested In an " appointment to the U.' S. Merchant Merch-ant Marine Academy at Kings Point, New York. .Applications must reach the Senator before ' Jan. 31. ) . 4 "This is a wonderful opportunity opportu-nity for Utah boys who want to male seafaring their profession." the Senator said. "Upon graduation grad-uation they will become officers in the U. S. Merchant Marine, a calling 'which takes courage, stamina " and skill. With the ... atom-powered merchant ship a posEiWlity in the not too distant futnre, the profession of mariner will soon require an even higher Icrcl of training, and challenging challeng-ing careers lie, ahead." The Senator will make ten nominations for the two Utah , vacancies at the Academy. Candidates Can-didates will undergo both mental men-tal and physical examinations, ard the successful applicants win enter the ArAdnv on Au-rv Au-rv -4h oTtiwrTTear. It is an accredited four - year - degree- 'ii'tv urn 'U.ir. mmm m 1 m mm granting college skxilar to West Point and' Annapolis. According to the Senator, to be eligible for nomination - a yoUr.g man must be a U. S. citizen, citi-zen, unmarried, haTe passed his seventeenth birthday and not have passed"hi3ty enty-secoad birthday on AUgusr5l7bVaKg?r school graduate, and be a sl resident of Utah. " The Senator urges all interested interest-ed young -men to cornet !ua immediately either at his Washington, Wash-ington, D. C. office, in P.oeen 341 Senate Office Building, or at his Salt Lake City office. Rook: 617, Kearns Building. An Apple For the Oilman "Youngiminded" Is the crd for oilmen. As part of a ne tity school. project," two. oil companies have assigned their top-flight scientists and engineers engi-neers to spark advanced high school science classes These scientists wprk on company t:rr.e and with their companies" ctvt-liest ctvt-liest and most unusual research tools.' The lecture-decionitra-tion program gives youngsters a fifot-hand knowledge of what scientists are Uke and the wcrk they do. The purpose of the program is ta interest ir.-.y ":-;rr.t. tarter in science. u n t--vi- 'tin Eileen Farrell to be Featured On BYU-C'jmmunity Concert Series. Eileen Clubs and Socials rhQadra Study Group l!:s. Albert S. Bailey will be hostess ta members of the Phila-de Phila-de Study Group at.her home th;s evening Thursday, January I2-at 8:00 pm. The lesson will be presented by Mrs. Robert Hartshorn. All members - are unred to attend.- Latona Music Club s hos- tess to members of the La-tosia. La-tosia. Music Club at her home Wednesday afternoon, January 14. Assisting as co-hostesses were Mrs. Molo Bean. Mrs. Chart Andersen and, Mrs. Francis Pulley. Pul-ley. Mrs. Donald M. Northwood, vice president, as in charge and dub collect was read by Mrs. Ralph Smith. ' Mrs. Esther Day Smith gave the life of John Sebastian Bach. Beverly Booth played a piano solo, and two vocal solos were given by Mrs. Robert Smith. At the close of the meeting refreshments were served by the hostesses. . '". A Woman's World and Oil By Petroleum Perjrv She mho with pure tobacco mi2 not prime her nose, can be do lady: of the time." This couplet, written by of all people . a . Puritan lady, referred re-ferred to the wide-spread 17th Century habit of taking snuff. Snuff .was Introduced in Europe in the middle ol the 16th Century for medicinal use,.but it caught on in the fashionable m-or:a and soon tne navor ana cost of a man's snuff marked his rank and wealth. By the ISth Century, the snuff erase was refined into a so-called "arV with elaborate rules gov erning the procedure Irom , the fcrst handling of the box to the final sneeze. It was this period that produced the exquisite sniff boxes found in museum collec tions. - . Far from being antiquated, snuff in our own time is not to he spiffed. at.. Almost 40 million pounds a year are produced tea times as much as at the turn of the century and about half d 41 Is said to women! Snuff is particularly popular among factory workers who are cot permitted to smoke on the ob because of safety reasons. Many of them doat sniff-it; they suck it to keep their mouths moist. , T'i" There are wet snuffs and dry sssffs, and each category con tains many blends and flavors. Dry snuffs are usually packed ta tins of paper, wet snuffs in bottles or cardboard boxes waterproofed wat-erproofed with a special petro- tana wax. Petroleum is also used to fuel the heaters which, dry snuff tobaccos. Many of our comforts as well as our food, clothing, and shelter come to us with the heip of petroleum" products. Snuff -matins is a perfect example ex-ample of the many small, but thriving, American businesses In which petroleum products have apart. - - - - ' .Duty is the subllmest word In the language you can never do more than your duty; you should never wish to do less, ' Robert E.Lee Farrell Eiben Farrell, America's first j lady of song, will be presented in ; concert at Brigham Young Uni- rvcrsity Jan. 25 at 8:15 p.m.'in the George Albert Smith Field' house. The concert is the next in, the BYU-Community Concert series. For her concert,": Miss Farrell i will sing "My Heart Ever Faith ful" from Cantata No. 68 and Bete, bete"' from Cantata No. 115 by Bach; aria. "Divinitesdu Styx" from "Aleqste" by Gluek' "Dort in den aveiden," "O kuh-ler-Wald," "Ber Schmeid," "Es traumte mir," and "Fruhling-strost" "Fruhling-strost" by Brahms; and aria "Ernani, lnvolami" from "Erna-ni" "Erna-ni" by VerdL ,. The second part of the program pro-gram will include ,-Air de Lia" from "L'Enfant Prodigue" and '"Fleur des bles" by Debussy; ur." "Hntpl " "Vnvaro Paris" Iv, , "j " ,by Poulenc; "Seranade" by Car-(penter; Car-(penter; T Must Walk that Lone some Valley" by Shaw; -The Pasture" by Naginski; "Where is Dis Road A-Leadin' Me To," by Harold Arlen; "Phoenix" by Browning; and aria "Pace, pa'ce, mio Dio" from "La Forza del Destino" by Verdi. " r " Called by the critics the great est dramatic soprano in the world, Miss Farrell was first taught by her mother, who was an instructor in singing at Storrs College (now the University of Connecticut). Advanced music study with other teachers followed and in 1942 her. career was launched over CBS radio network in a weekly series called "Songs of the Century" which drew so many fans. It was followed by another dubbed "Eileen Farrell Presents." In 1947 she left the air to be gin a concert career, and 1950-51 not only marked her first Car negie Hall recital,-but also 61 perfomances as soloist with the New York Philharmonic in five i separate engagements. Someone away AT SCHOOL? Keep la touch y ' Rate or lowed after 6 p.m. artcf oil day Sunday always lower when yov call tati6fi-to-tarion, Moantala States Telepbon j LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF THE INTENTION OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION EDUCA-TION OF ALPINE SCHOOL DISTRICT, - UTAH- COUNTY. STATE OF .UTAH TO ISSUE BONDS OFJSAID DISTRICT IN THE SUM OF ONE HUNDRED FIFTY' THOUSAND : DOLLARS ($ 150,000.00 ,: FOR THE PUR-i POSE OF PAYINO AND RE- MATURING" BONDS- OF SAID DISTRICT. AND NOTICE OF A TIME AND PLACE FOR RECEIVING RE-CEIVING OBJECTIONS TO THE LEGALITY, REGULARITY OR. VALIDITY OF SAID BONDS OR Pop the issue .or sale THEREOFTOR OFTHETN-" DEBTEDNESS REPRESENTED THEREBY.' f PUBLIC NOiTCE Is hereby! given that in accordance with a resolution adopted by the Board of Education of Alpine School District, Utah County, State of Utah, on the 5th day of January, 1959, the said Board of Educa tion proposes to issue the- re funding bonds of said school district in the sum of one Hun- dred Fifty Thousand ,. Dollars ' ($150,000.00), dated March 1. 1959,! in the denomination of One ' ;ud d u'l 1 a r g""Tsnci each numbered one (1 to one; hundred fifty .(150) both inclu-j sive, bearing interest not to ex-j ceed four per cent (4) per; annum, . interest payable semi-- annually on March 1 and Sep tember 1, beginning with September Sep-tember 1, 1959, all of said bonds to mature and become due and payable on the 1st day of March; 1963. "Said bonds. are to be issued for the purpose of refunding and redeeming outstanding and ma turing bonds of the Board of Education of Alpine School Dis trict, Utah County, Utah, as fol lows: Bonds in the total principal prin-cipal amount of One Hundred Fifty. Thousand Dollars $150,- 000.00 rr numbered One Thousand One (1001 to Ons Thousand One Hundred Fifty (1150 . both in clusive, of the denomination of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00 each, dated March 1, 1948, bearing bear-ing interest of two and one-half per cent (22) per annum and maturing March 1. 1959. "NOTICE is also given that any and all persons objecting to the legality, regularity or validity vali-dity of safd refunding bonds to be issued or of the issue or sale thereof,- or of the indebtedness represented thereby, are hereby required to be and appear before the Board of Education of Al pine School District at its office in American Fork, Utah, a place within said school district, on the- 2nd -day-of-February,-1959,1 at the hour of 4:00 o'clock PAI, then and there to present, in i writinc rinlv vprifiArl- such oh-' jection as he or they may have idity of said bonds, the issue or sale thereof, or the indebtedness indebted-ness represented thereby. If no such written objections are pre- Nonarrow-gauge" car smooths the bumps like - H ,i,ni 7n , - , Lfe i ' . ' : .' -nrr r ....,....,. i 1 ....... The wheels ore moved out 5 inthei . V v 1 for Road-test the Bumps are banished by Pontiacs Vk3cs rlVack Wheels widest, steadiest stance on the road. Sway and lean on curves disappear, too. Cornering is safer and handling alm:t magic with the year's most important automotive auto-motive advance. Come in and see for yourse'f why no other car can offer the readability of Wide-Track Pontiac! - America's IIiiniEr (Ty?oad Carl DRIVE IT AXD YOU'LL BUY IT! sented at the time and place specified herein, the Board of Education of Alpine School Disr trict shall; thereupon so certify and all persons shall thereafter be forever barred from questioning question-ing in any manner or proceeding proceed-ing the legality, regularity or validity-of such' bondsr-of the issue and sale thereof, or of the indebtedness represented thereby, there-by, and thereof, said Board of Education Ed-ucation of Alpine School, District mayjthere-upon refund and redeem re-deem the said outstanding bonds." IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Board of 'Education of Alpine School District, Utah County, Utah, has caused this notice to be given this 5th day of January, 1959. Frank C. Greenwood . President of. the Board of Education of Alpine School . District, Utah County, State of Utah. ATTEST: ELIJAH CHIPMAN ! Clerk of the Board of Educa- lion of Alpine School District. Dis-trict. Utah County. State of -Utah. Pub. January 15, 22, 1959. The Navy's . newest aircraft carrier, USS Independence, contains con-tains ISO miles of piping and 290 miles ef electric cable. TfiQ burden grows heavier AH property owners in Ulah pay higher property taxes now than in the past. But mining's burden has become heavier than the' others. The figures speak for themselves. them-selves. From 1939 through 1957 property taxes charged, to non-mining property increased 330-During the same period, property taxes charged to mining jumped a big 920. UTAH f.UIJING ASSOCIATION From the earth comes SAY-GOODBYE TO AMERICAN FORK 15 East Main Street D. C Brandt, Manager Phone: 860 lows below $600 md by Gty Finonc Co. (Ulah) - The wheels ore moved out 5 inthei the widest, steadiest stance in America; only car with Wide SEE YOUR LOCAL. AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER Paul L. Harmon Co. 237 West Slain -Telephone 535 American Fork . Notice to Creditors . JOINT ESTATE OF ALFRED FREDERICK AND EL VINA S. FREDERICK, decedents. - Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned undersign-ed Administratrix at the office j of O. DeVere Woottotir Attorney at Law, Suite 12, Geneva Building, Build-ing, American Fork, Utah, on or before March 21, 1959. Thlrza Gill -Administratrix rrr: O. DeVere' Wootton Attorney for Administratrix American Fork, Utah First publication Jan. 15, 1959. Last publication Feb. 5, 1959. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF 'JOHN HYRUM WRIGHT, Deceased, ' Creditor will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned undersign-ed administrator at the office of Heber Grant Ivins, Attorney at Law, Suite 4, Geneva Finance Building, American Fork, Utah, on or before" the 24th day of May, 1959. F. .Rulon Nicholes . Administrator ITeber Grant Ivins A ttorney lor Administrate American Fork, Utah First publication January 22, 1951 Last publication February 12, 1959 ait abundant life for alt"-' BILLS with a $25 to $2000 - Track Wheels POMTIAC! "WomUr-Touth" Power Steering the safest, eaakat m developed for both .driving and parking plus urwurparwed - feel of the road. Optional at extra coat. K ! 5 XT'. f&fW!V-' 1 !-r-:ry |